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Complex Simplicity

 
Album Review: Complex Simplicity

  • Artist: Teedra Moses
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: August 10, 2004
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rhythm & Blues

Review

The knock against neo-soul is that it looks desperately to the past instead of the present or future, having disconnected somewhere in the late '70s, just before the wicked drum machines and synthesizers came around to siphon the soul out of R&B. Pop-oriented R&B is routinely faulted for being insincere and inauthentic, full of flash and bleating-goat ululations. New R&B artists in 2004 tended to be slotted into one of the two categories, either next to Jill Scott and "the next D'Angelo," or next to Usher and "the next Beyoncé." Singer and songwriter Teedra Moses sees the good in both sides, realizing that there must be some people out there who are thrilled by modern-day hip-hop-minded productions but crave lyrical content that goes deeper than memorable hooks and identikit platitudes about desire, romantic drama, and soul-searching. Just as importantly, Moses and primary collaborator Paul Poli -- who also teamed up to write and produce Christina Milian's "Dip It Low," an ill-suited reference for the sound of this album -- draw from elements of the past that, save for some Bad Boy samples, have rarely fit into the framework of any R&B for the past several years. The two would be more likely to gush about Patrice Rushen's "Remind Me" or Al B. Sure!'s "Nite and Day" than Innervisions or What's Going On, and the spirit of their work can bring to mind the period when TLC and Mary J. Blige were coming of age. These references inform rather than define the songs. (To further determine the angle of the album, the two tracks not handled by Poli are produced by the best ambassadors of neo-soul and pop-rap/R&B imaginable -- Raphael Saadiq and Lil Jon, respectively.) Moses has a voice that is light and innocent-sounding, offset by all the evidence that she has been through her share of experiences. She may lack the showmanship of her gold and platinum contemporaries, but she can coast on the details that take several listens to surface, like the way "And listen daddy I'm too cute to fight/You better get that bitch told tonight" is somehow the sweetest, catchiest line on the album, or how the title track flips the common "party your troubles away" theme by preceding the joyous chorus, amidst Paisley Park percussion hits, with "Daddy he wasn't there/Momma she's gone now/I gotta be grown/I need you to hold me down." (How many songs turn you into a baller and a bawler at the same time?) This, Moses' debut, is the best R&B album of 2004 -- if not the best pop-oriented R&B album since CrazySexyCool. ~ Andy Kellman, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Be Your Girl Teedra Moses (4:09)
You'll Never Find (A Better Woman) Teedra Moses, Jadakiss (4:13)
Caution Teedra Moses (4:37)
Backstroke Teedra Moses (3:37)
No More Tears Teedra Moses (4:11)
Rescue Me Teedra Moses (4:06)
Take Me Teedra Moses, Raphael Saadiq (4:44)
You Better Tell Her Teedra Moses (6:15)
Outta My Head Teedra Moses (3:39)
Complex Simplicity Teedra Moses (4:16)
For a Lifetime Teedra Moses (4:15)
Caught Up Teedra Moses (4:14)
Last Day Teedra Moses (3:41)
I Think of You (Shirley's Song) Teedra Moses (6:06)

Credits

Paul Poli (Audio Production), Raphael Saadiq (Vocals), Malachy Robinson (Percussion), Kelvin Wooten (Guitar), Jonathan Smith (Audio Production), Amy Johnson (A&R), Teedra Moses (Executive Producer), Ryan Freeland (Engineer), Poli Paul (Vocal Arrangement), Mac Robinson (Guitar), Raphael Saadiq (Vocal Arrangement), Mac Robinson (Keyboards), Paul Poli (Executive Producer), Bryan Leach (A&R), Claire Fisher (String Arrangements), Nonja McKenzie (Stylist), Teedra Moses (Vocals), Paul Poli (Producer), Greg "Frosty" Smith (Engineer), Poli Paul (Producer), Raphael Saadiq (Audio Production), Mac Robinson (Percussion), Jonathan Smith (Producer), Ryan Freeland (Mixing), Mark Gray (Assistant), Malachy Robinson (Guitar), Malachy Robinson (Bass), Gerry "The Gov" Brown (Engineer), Bryan Leach (Executive Producer), Paul Poli (Audio Engineer), Daniel Romero (Mixing), Malachy Robinson (Keyboards), Rich Balmer (Engineer), Tony Gillis (Mastering), Kevin "KD" Davis (Mixing), Gerald Clayton (Keyboards), Kelvin Wooten (Drums), Ryan Freeland (Audio Engineer), Raphael Saadiq (Producer), Shaffer Smith (Vocal Arrangement), Kelvin Wooten (Keyboards), Daniel Romero (Engineer), Poli Paul (Executive Producer), Benjamin Wheelock (Design), Raphael Saadiq (Guitar), Anthony Mandler (Photography), Raphael Saadiq (Bass), Jadakiss (Rap), Poli Paul (Engineer), Teedra Moses (Vocal Arrangement), John Frye (Mixing), Poli Paul (Keyboards)
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Wikipedia: Complex Simplicity
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Complex Simplicity
Studio album by Teedra Moses
Released July 20, 2004 (2004-07-20)
(see release history)
Recorded 2003–2004
Genre R&B, soul, neo soul
Label TVT
Producer Paul Poli, Raphael Saadiq, Lil Jon
Professional reviews
Teedra Moses chronology
The Young Hustla Compilation Volume 1
(2004)
Complex Simplicity
(2004)
The Young Lioness
(2009)
Alternate covers
Asian cover
UK cover

Complex Simplicty is the debut album by American R&B-soul singer Teedra Moses, released in the United States on July 20, 2004 by TVT Records. All tracks are produced by Paul Poli, except "Take Me", produced by Raphael Saadiq, and "You Better Tell Her", produced by Lil Jon. All lyrics are written by Moses. While underperforming on the charts and being virutally unknown in mainstream music, the album has managed to become an underground classic, a feat highly attributed to its positive critical ratings and reviews.

Contents

Critical reception

Complex Simplicity has been embraced by many fans, bloggers, and music critics. The album is said to be "awe-inspiring and cool and touching and kind of avant-garde in a weird homegrown way."[1] Vibe called the album "a great entry into the R&B game."[2] Further, Allmusic's review stated boldly that Complex Simplicity "is the best R&B album of 2004—if not the best pop-oriented R&B album since CrazySexyCool."[3] The album compelled many critics to compare to superstars and legends of R&B, including Mary J. Blige,[3] Deniece Williams,[4] Teena Marie, and Cherrelle.

Track listing

  1. "Be Your Girl" – 4:09
  2. "You'll Never Find (A Better Woman)" (featuring Jadakiss) – 4:13
  3. "Caution" – 4:37
  4. "Backstroke" – 3:37
  5. "No More Tears" – 4:11
  6. "Rescue Me" – 4:06
  7. "Take Me" (featuring Raphael Saadiq) – 4:44
  8. "You Better Tell Her" – 6:15
  9. "Outta My Head" – 3:39
  10. "Complex Simplicity" – 4:16
  11. "For a Lifetime" – 4:15
  12. "Caught Up" – 4:14
  13. "Last Day" – 3:41
  14. "I Think of You (Shirley's Song)" – 6:06

UK edition

  1. "Be Your Girl" – 4:09
  2. "You'll Never Find (A Better Woman)" (featuring Jadakiss) – 4:13
  3. "Caution" – 4:37
  4. "Backstroke" – 3:37
  5. "No More Tears" – 4:11
  6. "Rescue Me" – 4:06
  7. "Take Me" (featuring Raphael Saadiq) – 4:44
  8. "You Better Tell Her" (featuring Lil' Scrappy) – 4:29
  9. "Outta My Head" – 3:39
  10. "Doin' You" – 3:58
  11. "Complex Simplicity" – 4:16
  12. "For a Lifetime" – 4:15
  13. "Caught Up" – 4:14
  14. "Last Day" – 3:41
  15. "I Think of You (Shirley's Song)" – 6:06
  16. "Still Your Girl" (featuring Raphael Saadiq, Truth Hurts and Scipio) – 4:15

European edition

  1. "Be Your Girl" (Video)

The European and Asian releases of Complex Simplicity had the same track listing as the North American edition. The Asian release had an alternate artwork but was otherwise identical to the North American release. The European release was enhanced to include the video for "Be Your Girl", but was otherwise identical to the North American release. No video was included on the UK edition.

Unreleased/non-album tracks

  • "Still Got Love" — featured as a B-side to the 12" single for "Be Your Girl". Originally listed on the Complex Simplicity track listing.
  • "Cut Buddy" (featuring Kwamé "K1 Mill") — this track was originally intended for Christina Milian, and now has been recorded by Natasha. The demo version appeared on a Trackmasters mixtape hosted by Milian.

The following tracks were also originally intended for Complex Simplicity, but were replaced by newer tracks:

  • "Blow Me Out"
  • "Winter '96"
  • "Cabaret"

Singles

"Be Your Girl"
Released June 1, 2004 (U.S.)
May 31, 2004 (UK)
Writer(s) Teedra Moses, Paul Poli, N. Jones, R. Santiago, C. Jones
Producer(s) Paul Poli
Video director Hype Williams
"Be Your Girl" was Teedra Moses' first ever released song, and introduced her debut album Complex Simplicity. The track, produced by Paul Poli, is a teaser of her style, being a '90s soul-inspired track, laced by a mellow synth that takes back to the '80s funk music. It contains replayed elements from "One On One" (N. Jones, R. Santiago, C. Jones), as well as a sample from "Ahmad Jamal" - "The Awakening"

The video for the song was directed by Hype Williams. Promo singles were issued in the U.S. and the UK, however retail singles were only available in Germany. The UK had several different version of the promo CD single, produced by TVT UK.

Chart positions

#87 (U.S.)

"You'll Never Find (A Better Woman)"
Released October 18, 2004 (UK)
Writer(s) Teedra Moses, Paul Poli, J. Phillips, V. Allen, A. Hudson, J. Hall
Producer(s) Paul Poli
"You'll Never Find (A Better Woman)" was the first single from Complex Simplicity, but was only a radio single.

It features rapper Jadakiss and contains a sample from Alicia Myers' "Better Woman or Bigger Fool" (V. Allen, A. Hudson, J. Hall), from her I Fooled You This Time LP.

"You Better Tell Her"
Released 2005 (U.S.)
Writer(s) Teedra Moses, Jonathan Smith, Darryl Richardson, Armando Perez
Producer(s) Lil Jon
"You Better Tell Her" was the third U.S. single from the album, and 12" copies were available for promotional use, with a small number of CD singles produced by Black Moses Music in circulation.

It features rappers Pitbull and Lil' Scrappy, and it's the third version of the song, after the no-rap version featured on the U.S. edition of the album and the only Lil' Scrappy-featured version featured on the UK release. All three cuts were produced by Lil Jon.

Personnel

  • Rich Balmer – Engineer
  • Gerry "The Gov" Brown – Engineer
  • Gerald Clayton – Keyboards
  • Kevin "KD" Davis – Mixing
  • Claire Fisher – String Arrangements
  • Ryan Freeland – Engineer, Mixing
  • John Frye – Mixing
  • Tony Gillis – Mastering
  • Mark Gray – Assistant
  • Amy Johnson – A&R
  • Bryan Leach – Executive Producer, A&R
  • Anthony Mandler – Photography
  • Nonja McKenzie – Stylist
  • Teedra Moses – Executive Producer, Vocal Arrangement
  • Poli Paul – Keyboards, Producer, Engineer, Executive Producer, Vocal Arrangement
  • Paul Poli – Producer, Executive Producer
  • Malachy Robinson – Bass, Guitar, Percussion, Keyboards
  • Daniel Romero – Engineer, Mixing
  • Raphael Saadiq – Bass, Guitar, Producer, Vocal Arrangement
  • Greg "Frosty" Smith – Engineer
  • Jonathan Smith – Producer
  • Shaffer Smith – Vocal Arrangement
  • Benjamin Wheelock – Design
  • Kelvin Wooten – Guitar, Drums, Keyboards

Charts

Chart (2004) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard 200 168
U.S. Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums 20
U.S. Billboard Top Independent Albums 11
U.S. Billboard Top Heatseekers 10

Release history

Region Date Label
United States July 20, 2004 TVT
Canada EMI
Australia September 8, 2004 TVT
Japan February 2, 2005 Victor
United Kingdom June 20, 2005 TVT
Europe (except the UK) January 20, 2006

References


 
 

 

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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Complex Simplicity" Read more